———————. Toward a New Deal in Baltimore: People and Government in the Great Depression. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988. [F 189.B157 A74 1988 [History of New Deal in Baltimore on an administrative and popular level.]

———————. “‘The Right to Strike’: Labor Organization and the New Deal in Baltimore. Maryland Historical Magazine 78, (1983): 299-318.

———————. “Toward a Roosevelt Coalition: The Democratic Party and the New Deal in Baltimore.” Maryland Historical Magazine 82 (1987): 288-305..

Dunn, Mary Ann. “The Life of Isaac Freeman Rasin, Democratic Leader of Baltimore from 1870-1907.” M.S., The Catholic University of America, 1949.

Dürr, William Theodore. “The Conscience of a City: A History of The City’s Planning and Housing Association and Effortsto Improve Housing for the Poor in Baltimore, Maryland, 1937-1954. Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1972. [HD 7304.B2 D87]

————-. The Making of an American Jewish Community: The History of Baltimore Jewry from 1773 to 1920. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1970.

Franch, Michael S. “Congregation and Community in Baltimore, 1840-1860.” Ph.D., University of Maryland, 1984.LD3231.M70d (UMCP)[Church response to exodus to new residential areas.]

Freeman, Elaine. “Negro Leadership in Baltimore at the End of the Nineteenth Century.” M.A., George Washington University, 1970. [not in MD Union Cat., 8/93]

French, H. Findlay and Ralph J. Robinson. Baltimore Industrial Development 1919-1950; Specifically theBackground, Establishment and Operations of the Industrial Bureau with Didelights on the Location History of Some Well Known Companies. Baltimore: Privately printed, 1964.

McDonald, Patricia Ann. “Baltimore Women, 1870-1900. Ph.D., University of Maryland, 1976. [Study in participation in political, social and cultural activities.]

McGuinn, Henry J. “The Courts and the Occupational Status of Negroes in Maryland.” Social Forces 18 (October1939): 256-68. Traces attempts to open up occupations for blacks between 1877-1930s. [UB has periodical]

McKelvey, Blake. The Urbanization of America, 1860-1915. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1963. [HT 123.M23; City growth in America. Emphasizes Baltimore’s “sameness” to other American cities.]

————–. “Residential Baltimore at the Turn of the Century: A City of Contrasts.” Baltimore Engineer, August 1986.

Putney, Martha S. “The Baltimore Normal School for the Education of Colored Teachers: Its Founders and its Founding.” Maryland Historical Magazine 72 (1977): 238-52. [Discusses institution that became Bowie State in 1908.]

—————-. West Baltimore Neighborhoods: Sketches of their History, 1840-1960. D. Randall Beirne and Joan Henley, general eds. Baltimore: University of Baltimore, 1993. [Series of neighborhood studies, based on source materials that include maps, atlases, newspapers, institutional histories and oral testimony.]

Sandler, Gilbert. The Neighborhood: The Story of Baltimore’s Little Italy. Baltimore: Bodine and Associates, Inc., 1974.

—————-. “Radio as Radio Used to Be.” Baltimore 60 (1967): 25.

Schalk, Harry G. “Mini-Revisionism in City Planning History: The Planners of Roland Park. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 29 (1970): 347-49.

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Good afternoon, I am researching the history of Little Italy for a book. I’m a little confused as I’m finding names of articles I’d like to read, such as the examples listed below. Could you clarify … are they available for view online? Or is a physical visit necessary?

Suzanna, this is a bibliography created by Dean Krimmel and Richard Longstreth. It is on our website to help people direct their research, but we own very very few of these, and most are not available online. I would suggest visiting the Maryland Department at the Enoch Pratt Free Library, the library at the Maryland Historical Society, and nearby universities to find these volumes.